FREE CURATING RESEARCH PDF Hyunjoo Byeon,Carson Chan,Olga Fernandez-Lopez,Kate Fowle,Maja Fowkes,Reuben Fowkes,Liam Gillick,Georgina Jackson,Sidsel Nelund,Simon Sheikh | 262 pages | 24 Feb 2015 | Open Editions | 9780949004031 | English | London, United Kingdom Curating for Research | JAR A curator from Latin : curameaning "to take care" [1] is a manager or overseer. Traditionally, a curator or keeper of a cultural heritage institution e. A traditional curator's concern necessarily involves tangible objects of some sort — artwork, collectibles, historic items or scientific collections. More recently, new kinds of curators have started to emerge: curators of digital data objects and biocurators. In smaller organizations, a curator may have sole responsibility for acquisitions and even for collections care. The curator makes decisions regarding what objects to select, oversees their potential and documentation, conducts research based on the collection and its history, provides proper packaging of art for transportation, and shares research with the public and community through exhibitions and publications. In very small, volunteer-based museums such as those of local historical societies, a curator may be the only paid staff-member. In larger institutions, the curator's primary function is that of a subject specialist, with the expectation that he or she will conduct original research on objects and Curating Research the organization in Curating Research collecting. Such institutions can have multiple curators, each assigned to a specific collecting area e. In such organizations, the physical care of the Curating Research may be overseen by museum collections-managers or by museum conservators, with documentation and administrative matters such as personnel, insurance, and loans handled by a museum registrar. In the United Kingdom, the term "curator" also applies to government employees who monitor Curating Research quality of contract archaeological work under Planning Policy Guidance Archaeology Curating Research Planning PPG 16 and manage the cultural resource Curating Research a region. In the museum setting, a curator in the United Kingdom Curating Research also be called a "keeper". In Scotland, the term "curator" is also Curating Research to mean the guardian of a Curating Research, known as curator ad litem. In Curating Research US, curators have multifaceted tasks Curating Research on the particular institution and its mission. But Curating Research recent years [ when? As US museums have become increasingly more digitized, curators find themselves constructing narratives in both the material and digital worlds. Historian Elaine Gurian has called Curating Research museums in which "visitors could comfortably search for answers to their own questions regardless of the Curating Research placed on such questions by others". Citizens are then able to educate themselves on the specific subject they are interested in, Curating Research than spending time listening to information they have no desire to learn. More recently, [ when? This has been a focus in major art institutions internationally and has become an object of academic study and research. In contemporary artthe title "curator" identifies a Curating Research who selects and Curating Research interprets works of art. Curating Research addition to selecting works, the curator is often responsible Curating Research writing labels, catalog essays, and other content supporting exhibitions. Such curators may be permanent staff members, "guest curators" from an affiliated organization or university, or Curating Research curators" working on a consultancy basis. The lateth century saw an explosion of artists organizing exhibitions. The artist-curator has a long tradition of influence, notably featuring Sir Joshua Reynoldsinaugural president of the Royal Academy of ArtsLondon, founded in In some US cultural organizations, the term "curator" may designate the head of any given Curating Research. This has led Curating Research the proliferation of titles such as "Curator of Education" and "Curator of Exhibitions". The term "literary curator" has been used to describe persons who work in the field of poetry, such as former 92nd Curating Research Y poetry-director Karl Kirchwey. In Australia and New Zealand, the term also applies to a person who prepares a sports ground for use especially a cricket ground. In France, the term curator is translated as conservateur. Curators hold a high academic degree in their subject, typically a Doctor of Philosophy or a master's degree in subjects such as history, art, history of artarchaeologyanthropologyor classics. The course is now funded by Arts Council Englandand in the Curating Research title was amended to Curating Contemporary Art to more accurately reflect the content and primary focus of the programme. Similarly, the Whitney Museum of American Artthrough its independent study program, hosts a curatorial program as one of its three study areas, and de Appel arts centre has hosted a curatorial programme since Community curation— also known as co-curation or public curation Curating Research —is a movement in U. Community members involved in community curation are Curating Research not trained as museum professionals, but have vested interests in the outcomes of curatorial projects. Community curation practices are varied. The Wing Luke Museum conducts community outreach at the beginning of exhibition projects, and convenes community advisory committees at various stages in the curatorial process. In the same way that a museum curator may acquire Curating Research of relevance or an art curator may select or interpret a work of art, the injection of technology and impact of social media into every aspect of society has seen the emergence of technology curators. Technology curators are people who are able to disentangle the science and logic of a particular technology and apply it Curating Research real- world situations and society, whether it is for social change, commercial advantage, or other purposes. The first U. Wired Conference had a test lab, where an independent curator selected technology that showcased radical technology advancements and their impact on society, such as the ability to design and "print" physical objects using 3D printers such as a fully working violin or the ability to model and represent accurate interactive medical and molecular Curating Research in stereoscopic Curating Research. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Not to be confused with Curate. Cambridge University Press. The Smithsonian Institution. Curating Research October 15, Archived from the original on December 4, Harper, How to become a museum curator. Archived from the original on January 14, Retrieved May 30, July 8, Retrieved June 27, Burcaw, G. Lanham, MD: Altamira Press. Glaser, J. Curating Research, J. Tate Publishing. Sullivan, L. Thea, C. Graham, B. Cambridge: MIT Press. Visual arts and the art world. Timeline of art Art history academic study Art manifesto Art movements Criticism feminist History of painting outline. Art magazines Art media Art techniques Art movements Art museums largest most visited sculpture parks single artist Art reference books Modern artists Contemporary artists Contemporary art galleries Painters by name Curating Research nationality Photographers Sculptors Most expensive paintingssculpturesworks by living Curating Research. Painting portal Visual arts portal Arts portal. Conservation Curating Research restoration of cultural heritage. Collecting Collection artwork Collections care Collection catalog Collections maintenance Collections management museum Collection Management Policy Collections management system Cultural heritage management Cultural resources management Deaccessioning museum Digital repository audit method based on risk assessment Display case Documentation of cultural property Emergency response museum Exhibition of cultural heritage objects Found in collection Inherent vice Inventory museum Museum integrated pest management Preservation metadata Preservation Metadata: Implementation Strategies Preservation of meaning Preservation survey Provenance Repatriation Restoration cultural heritage Storage of cultural heritage objects. Art handler Collection manager Conservator-restorer Conservation scientist Conservation technician Curator Exhibition designer Mount maker Objects conservator Paintings conservator Photograph conservator Preservationist Registrar museum Textile conservator. Antiques restoration Archaeological science Archaeology Bioarchaeology Building restoration Conservation science Digital photograph restoration Digital preservation Database preservation Film preservation Frame conservation Heritage science Historic preservation Media preservation Object conservation Optical media preservation Painting conservation Preservation library and archival science Restoration Sustainable preservation Web archiving. Aging artwork Anastylosis Arrested decay Architecture Cradling paintings Detachment of wall paintings Desmet method Historic paint analysis Imaging of cultural heritage Inpainting Kintsugi Leafcasting Lining of paintings Mass Curating Research Mold control and prevention in libraries Overpainting Paper splitting Radiography of cultural objects Reconstruction architecture Rissverklebung Textile stabilization Transfer of panel paintings UVC-based preservation VisualAudio. Authority control GND : Categories : Curators Art curators Visual arts exhibitions Education and training
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